Rescue team pulling woman from frozen pond with ambulance lights flashing through winter trees

Cops Pluck Woman from Icy Pond

At a Glance

  • A woman plunged into an icy Lehigh Township pond at 2:36 p.m. Sunday
  • Officers responded to a 9-1-1 pendant alert on the 3400 block of West Walker Drive
  • 88° body temperature recorded at hospital after neighbors helped with rescue
  • Why it matters: Quick emergency response and community teamwork prevented hypothermia tragedy

A Sunday-afternoon pond-cleaning chore turned life-threatening when a woman slipped into frigid water along West Walker Drive, prompting a rapid rescue by Lehigh Township police and a nearby neighbor.

The 9-1-1 Pendant That Sparked Action

Woman shivering while shoveling frozen pond with winter coat and snowy mountains behind

Dispatchers received the automated alarm at 2:36 p.m. Sunday, according to township police. The signal came from the 3400 block of West Walker Drive, a residential stretch dotted with small backyard ponds common to the area.

  • Officers arrived within minutes
  • They spotted the victim waving her arms above the water’s surface
  • A neighbor heard the commotion and ran to assist

Together, the officers and the civilian formed a human chain to pull the woman onto the frozen bank.

From Frigid Water to Warm Ambulance

Once ashore, the woman told rescuers she had been cleaning a pond pump when she lost footing and tumbled in. Temperatures in the Lehigh Valley hovered near 30° all afternoon, accelerating hypothermia risk.

Police escorted her inside her home for dry clothes, then paramedics transported her to a nearby hospital. Emergency-room staff recorded her core temperature at 88°, well below the normal 98.6° and into the danger zone for cardiac arrhythmia.

Department Praises Team Effort

In a brief statement, Lehigh Township police credited both the swift response of patrol units and the willingness of residents to jump in-literally-to help a neighbor.

No names have been released, and authorities say the woman is expected to recover fully.

Key Takeaways

  • Medical alert pendants can shave critical minutes off response times
  • Hypothermia sets in fast when air temperatures dip below freezing
  • Community cooperation turned a potential fatality into a rescue story

Author

  • I’m Olivia Bennett Harris, a health and science journalist committed to reporting accurate, compassionate, and evidence-based stories that help readers make informed decisions about their well-being.

    Olivia Bennett Harris reports on housing, development, and neighborhood change for News of Philadelphia, uncovering who benefits—and who is displaced—by city policies. A Temple journalism grad, she combines data analysis with on-the-ground reporting to track Philadelphia’s evolving communities.

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